John Lennon / Plastic Ono Band or Yoko Ono / Plastic Ono Band?

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"simple R&B" - fuck you

Tim Ellison, Sunday, 8 April 2007 19:49 (nineteen years ago)

fuck you seconded.

anyway, these are amazingly good records, different but complementary expressions of the same impulse, both nuanced and fully realized and, while it's sort of impossible to use language like this non-choadishly, "real." the realness doesn't make them good, but it's there and undeniable and a big part of why they hit so hard. "why" is the crisis, "i found out" is what you find yourself left with after (btw i don't know why people don't single that one out more often - it's so fucking angry and the music is GREAT, i love lennon's scratch-noise guitar even when it's deployed sparingly).

pretzel walrus, Sunday, 8 April 2007 19:54 (nineteen years ago)

man, isolation. what a song.

ghost rider, Sunday, 8 April 2007 20:07 (nineteen years ago)

And Paul McCartney was the most important musical brain in the group, proving a touch of true musical sophistication to the otherwise way too raw and simple R&B roots.

um...kind of a contradiction there, you know, given that said sophistication was cribbed from the various motown songwriting styles (critics at the time mistook certain beatle chord progressions as mahler-influenced; nope, it was holland/dozier/holland, smokey robinson, etc.)

it's also demonstrably untrue that their hamburg roots "brought them no fame." they got so good in hamburg that the clubowners in liverpool who had previously ignored them finally let them pack the local clubs. for a reason.

Lawrence the Looter, Sunday, 8 April 2007 22:11 (nineteen years ago)

McCartney had a family background that meant he didn't only know "rock" but also other styles. Even on early Beatles albums he would cover non-rock songs such as "Till There Was You", later he'd come up with obvious non-"rock" masterpieces such as "Yesterday", "Michelle" and "She's Leaving Home". He had something the others (and other "rock" musicians) did, which is why The Beatles were so much better than everything from the past.

Motown didn't learn to vary chords, modulations and harmonics until late 1963-64, the first few Motown singles were just as oversimple and harmonically boring as most R&B had been before them.

Geir Hongro, Sunday, 8 April 2007 22:39 (nineteen years ago)

JL/POB by about fifty billion light years. Man I fucking hate Yoko Ono.

Mr. Snrub, Monday, 9 April 2007 00:16 (nineteen years ago)

He had something the others (and other "rock" musicians) did, which is why The Beatles were so much better than everything from the past.

it is true that mccartney had a relatively unique perspective; he greatly admired such artists as AMM and Albert Ayler. i assume you must have explored their work extensively as well; out of curiosity, what's your take on them?

Motown didn't learn to vary chords, modulations and harmonics until late 1963-64, the first few Motown singles were just as oversimple and harmonically boring as most R&B had been before them.

i'm not sure which standard for "oversimple" you're applying here; i'm assuming it's one that places western standards of harmony and tonality at the forefront of musical invention. so, by that standard, mary wells' "you beat me to the punch" and "two lovers"; eddie holland's "jamie"; and marvin gaye's "stubborn kind of fellow", to name just the obvious examples, use harmonic ideas and chordal modulations that the beatles were never able to approach (not in 1964, not in 1969, not ever), and these were all recorded and released prior to 1963. this isn't meant as a criticism of the beatles; obviously, looking at only the theoretical aspects of any artist's work divorced from context is as point-missingly hilarious as is possible. but sure, i'll grant that it can be a fun little diversion at times.

the irony, of course, is that the yo/pob record is far more harmonically complex than anything mccartney was able to dream up (excepting possibly "carnival of light," though i've never heard it).

Lawrence the Looter, Monday, 9 April 2007 01:14 (nineteen years ago)

"Plastic Ono Band" is mostly either three chord R&B or completely atonal bollocks. McCartney was able to come up with the latter too, but obviously didn't see the point too often. Instead he gave the world such harmonic masterpieces as the aforementioned "Michelle" and "Golden Slumbers".

Geir Hongro, Monday, 9 April 2007 01:28 (nineteen years ago)

Generally, John Lennon stopped writing good songs around 1968. He may have come up with the occasional exception ("Because", "Across The Universe", "Imagine", "Jealous Guy", "Oh My Love" and several of the "Double Fantasy" tracks), but mostly it was just R&B rubbish and exaggerated "anger" at the time, mostly given an annoyingly grainy "wall of sound"-production.

Geir Hongro, Monday, 9 April 2007 01:31 (nineteen years ago)

That being said, the three best McCartney solo albums were all written and produced at a time when Lennon wasn't even around to compete anymore.

Geir Hongro, Monday, 9 April 2007 01:33 (nineteen years ago)

I pick Yoko's.

Krautrock!

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 9 April 2007 01:40 (nineteen years ago)

Geir was so much more fun before Marcello took over his name here on nu-ILM.

CheddKass, Monday, 9 April 2007 01:57 (nineteen years ago)

there's some pretty great film from some of the Let It Be outtakes of Yoko fronting the Beatles, and they're playing "Why" (or something very close). Ringo's playing like a maniac and Paul's making 100% feedback, huddled over his amp and moving his bass around slowly about a foot away from it. George has left the room.

My favorite of all of John's guitar playing is on Yoko's POB & Fly. Though even without him, they'd still be amazing records.

Milton Parker, Monday, 9 April 2007 02:09 (nineteen years ago)

I mean, that really should go without saying actually, but when Geir's on a thread you tend to want to underline your point

Milton Parker, Monday, 9 April 2007 02:10 (nineteen years ago)

"Plastic Ono Band" is mostly either three chord R&B or completely atonal bollocks.

which pob, john's or yoko's? what are the specific elements that make it "r&b"? (i'm honestly just curious, as those records never struck me as "r&b" per se). how are you defining "r&b"? and just a slight correction to your typo, it's pantonal, not atonal. as george russell definied it, pantonal = all of the keys (western & non-western), atonal = none of them. as such, even from your point of view (for the sake of argument) those records are, by definition, more harmonically complex than any of mccartney's solo records, and most of his beatles work.

McCartney was able to come up with the latter too, but obviously didn't see the point too often. Instead he gave the world such harmonic masterpieces as the aforementioned "Michelle" and "Golden Slumbers".

how does stringing together a series of major chords constitute a "harmonic masterpiece"? i'm not saying it doesn't; just wanting to know how it does. as for mccartney not wanting to engage in pantonality, his officially-released examples are fewer than lennon's, but his experiments dwarf john's. paul seriously immersed himself in stuff like ayler and stockhausen when lennon was still wandering around muttering "avant-garde is french for 'bullshit.'"

exaggerated "anger" at the time, mostly given an annoyingly grainy "wall of sound"-production.

the sparseness/spareness of pob = "wall of sound"? ah yes, who could forget the echoey choirs and string section on "working class hero," the hordes of percussionists on "i found out," and the massive brass section on "well well well"?

Lawrence the Looter, Monday, 9 April 2007 03:38 (nineteen years ago)

I pick Yoko's.

Krautrock!


otm

Lawrence the Looter, Monday, 9 April 2007 03:39 (nineteen years ago)

there's some pretty great film from some of the Let It Be outtakes of Yoko fronting the Beatles, and they're playing "Why" (or something very close). Ringo's playing like a maniac and Paul's making 100% feedback, huddled over his amp and moving his bass around slowly about a foot away from it. George has left the room.

this better be on the dvd. if there ever is a dvd.

Lawrence the Looter, Monday, 9 April 2007 03:40 (nineteen years ago)

Instead he gave the world such harmonic masterpieces as the aforementioned "Michelle"...

Of all the songs to choose.

Does no one else think that Michelle is a twee joke record?

Bob Six, Monday, 9 April 2007 09:54 (nineteen years ago)

how does stringing together a series of major chords constitute a "harmonic masterpiece"?

The key is in the genius combination of major and minor chords. Paul McCartney did that better than most, while in more recent years Neil Finn has been the master of it.

Does no one else think that Michelle is a twee joke record?

That word should not be used in a negative context. "Rock" music needs to be considerably more twee. Twee music is good music.

Geir Hongro, Monday, 9 April 2007 13:17 (nineteen years ago)

the sparseness/spareness of pob = "wall of sound"? ah yes, who could forget the echoey choirs and string section on "working class hero," the hordes of percussionists on "i found out," and the massive brass section on "well well well"?

All done in virtually mono, in such a way that you can hardly make out the instruments from each other.

Geir Hongro, Monday, 9 April 2007 13:18 (nineteen years ago)

does no one else think that Michelle is a twee joke record?

I never thought so, but it's funny to picture Paul McCartney doing a Pooh Sticks or "Pop Songs Your New Boyfriend's Too Stupid To Know About," isn't it?

there's some pretty great film from some of the Let It Be outtakes of Yoko fronting the Beatles, and they're playing "Why" (or something very close). Ringo's playing like a maniac and Paul's making 100% feedback, huddled over his amp and moving his bass around slowly about a foot away from it. George has left the room.

Wanting to see this: seconded. On a related note, I finally heard George's Electronic Sounds recently. It's basically 45 minutes of George (and, depending on who's telling the story, Bernie Krause) randomly hitting keys. I don't usually use the phrase "anyone could have done this" as an insult, but it applies here.

mike a, Monday, 9 April 2007 14:27 (nineteen years ago)

I don't understand this sick idea that "Plastic Ono Band" is too atonal, I'd rather say the opposite.

To create truly original music you have to start with the following

- Abandon all sense of melody
- Abandon all sense of harmony
- Abandon all sense of a rhythmic pulse
- Make sure your music has no appeal to anyone but yourself. Once somebody else likes you you have lost.

Not until you have made sure to follow these instructions, you will succeed in having created truly great music.

Camenend Bob Dole, Monday, 9 April 2007 14:40 (nineteen years ago)

Bizarro-Geir checks in!

J, Monday, 9 April 2007 14:42 (nineteen years ago)

This is the Fake Geir at work is it not?

Tom D., Monday, 9 April 2007 14:44 (nineteen years ago)

John Lennon, McCartney and The Beatles are all awfully overrated btw. they did nothing that hasn't been done before by classical composers. Everything they did was abanondonded by Arnold Schönberg 60 years before.

Camenend Bob Dole, Monday, 9 April 2007 14:54 (nineteen years ago)

Don't get "Geir" started on Schoenberg, for gawdsake

Tom D., Monday, 9 April 2007 14:55 (nineteen years ago)

Oh, I have discussed with this Geir guy before, back in ama in the 90s. I have no interest in discussing more with him, or with any of the other losers behind ILM.

Camenend Bob Dole, Monday, 9 April 2007 14:57 (nineteen years ago)

Hmmm.. Is this Gondola Bob or what?

Geir Hongro, Monday, 9 April 2007 15:08 (nineteen years ago)

I finally heard George's Electronic Sounds recently. It's basically 45 minutes of George (and, depending on who's telling the story, Bernie Krause) randomly hitting keys. I don't usually use the phrase "anyone could have done this" as an insult, but it applies here.

supposedly harrison had absolutely nothing to do with this record, and in fact was as knee-jerk anti-avant-garde as mccartney is always accused of being. he was the one who kept "carnival of light" off anthology 2.

um...all this despite his participation in "revolution 9."

Lawrence the Looter, Monday, 9 April 2007 16:01 (nineteen years ago)

(FWIW, my post was a comic book reference to Camenend Bob Dole, not to Geir or "Geir")

J, Monday, 9 April 2007 16:12 (nineteen years ago)

they did nothing that hasn't been done before by classical composers. Everything they did was abanondonded by Arnold Schönberg 60 years before.


he's right, you know. check out early schoenberg -- the drummer speeds up slightly going into the fills, then pulls back, adding this incredible level of excitement and tension (best heard on schoenberg's version of the shirelles' "boys"). sometimes, when stuck for a hook, schoenberg would have a harmonica doubling the guitar line. schoenberg's tape collage work is all the more remarkable for it predating the invention of magnetic recording tape. which is why he soon abandoned it.

Lawrence the Looter, Monday, 9 April 2007 16:21 (nineteen years ago)

Twee music is good music.

i'm imagining elmer fudd grooving to music made by trees...

Lawrence the Looter, Monday, 9 April 2007 16:23 (nineteen years ago)

Does no one else think that Michelle is a twee joke record?

IT IS BASICALLY MY LEAST FAVORITE SONG EVER??? I ACTUALLY BIT THE INSIDE OF MY MOUTH IN ANGER AT IT BEING REFERENCED MULTIPLE X ON THIS THREAD. WOW!

also please do not tell me that is gondola bob then i will really stop reading ilm.

the schef (adam schefter ha ha), Monday, 9 April 2007 16:26 (nineteen years ago)

but seriously "honey pie" is actually the single most offensive paul mccartney song tho.

ghost rider, Monday, 9 April 2007 16:30 (nineteen years ago)

Wow, a lot of people here really suck.

billstevejim, Monday, 9 April 2007 16:37 (nineteen years ago)

css

ghost rider, Monday, 9 April 2007 16:39 (nineteen years ago)

I love "Honey Pie"!

J, Monday, 9 April 2007 17:07 (nineteen years ago)

It's fucking great. Beautiful. I'm going to go listen to it.

Tim Ellison, Monday, 9 April 2007 17:52 (nineteen years ago)

also please do not tell me that is gondola bob then i will really stop reading ilm.

On second thought, I doubt Gondola Bob would parody himself. He is way too pompous and narcissistic to be able to do that.

Geir Hongro, Monday, 9 April 2007 19:59 (nineteen years ago)

uh

ghost rider, Monday, 9 April 2007 20:03 (nineteen years ago)

I pick Yoko's.

Krautrock!

-- Shakey Mo

otm

-- Lawrence the Looter



Yep!

Myonga Vön Bontee, Monday, 9 April 2007 20:58 (nineteen years ago)

...not that I'm any kinda authority on the stuff, (superfluous) umlaut or not.

Myonga Vön Bontee, Monday, 9 April 2007 21:00 (nineteen years ago)

TS: Yoko Ono vs. Damo Suzuki

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 9 April 2007 21:08 (nineteen years ago)

Damo

Tim Ellison, Monday, 9 April 2007 21:11 (nineteen years ago)

I'm undecided myself ... I may have to give it to Yoko since Damo never composed any moving piano ballads (that I know of)

Shakey Mo Collier, Monday, 9 April 2007 21:14 (nineteen years ago)

two years pass...

COOKIE!!

Adam Bruneau, Sunday, 17 May 2009 13:27 (seventeen years ago)

People who whine about this being all serious and self-indulgent conveniently forget that in the middle of a purty nice song like "Hold On" John growls "COOKIE!!!!" out of nowhere, for absolutely no reason.

^ Z S on the internet here (Z S), Sunday, 17 May 2009 14:03 (seventeen years ago)

In all the things I've read about "POB" I've never read a mention of 'cookie' and it doesn't exist in the liner notes. I was half entertaining the idea that I had been imagining it this whole time!

Adam Bruneau, Sunday, 17 May 2009 14:40 (seventeen years ago)

High point of John's career--definitely in terms of guitar work; one of Ono's two best. And definitely the funkiest Ringo or Klaus Voorman ever got. Ono was nearing a Faust-like state.

Soundslike, Sunday, 17 May 2009 14:45 (seventeen years ago)

I really, really, really hope there are some bootlegs of the Klaus/Ringo/John rhythm section blasting from Valhalla somewhere.

This is why I like Ringo so much. He can act like a doofus, be the 'lucky guy that got picked randomly' to go down in history, and take all that criticism in stride. And then you hear this Yoko Ono POB stuff and think 'holy shit!!'

Ringo's so unpretentious. The day after they recorded 'Why' he was making a silly peace sign. I bet it never registered how badass it was, he just thinks "Oh well, that was a fun little jam with me friends!"

Adam Bruneau, Sunday, 17 May 2009 14:54 (seventeen years ago)

Had to research because "DAMN".

For the Fall issue of Purple magazine, Sean Lennon appears in a recreation of his parents’ famous 1981 Rolling Stone cover, their last photo together by financially troubled photographer Annie Leibovitz. The new snap by Terry Richardson features Sean in his mother’s place while nude model Kemp Muhl fills in for his dead father."

Nate Carson, Tuesday, 12 January 2010 02:31 (sixteen years ago)

Launched in 1969 with the single "Give Peace A Chance", PLASTIC ONO BAND is known for its avant-garde music, film, art, and activism. Revived in 2009, YOKO ONO PLASTIC ONO BAND includes Yoko Ono, Cornelius, Yuka Honda, Haruomi Hosono and Sean Lennon. On February 16, the group performs a very special concert, featuring songs from their new album Between My Head And The Sky , welcoming many special guests, including some original band members.

There are some eye-opening special guests.

http://imaginepeace.com/news/archives/9356

Thus Sang Freud, Tuesday, 12 January 2010 17:04 (sixteen years ago)

three years pass...

It occurred to me hearing "Give Peace a Chance" full through on the radio tonight that this tune has to be one of the most raggedy pop hits of all time. It's pretty much just one long chorus with a big group of singers and John Lennon scatting every so many measures. What the heck is making that drum beat sound? It might be more than just a microphone in a room. Maybe it was staged to sound that raw, I don't know, but it seems hard to believe that the song was that big a hit. The tune made it to #14 in the US charts and #2 in the UK.

earlnash, Saturday, 30 November 2013 04:27 (twelve years ago)

one year passes...

It's a tough choice because they're both excellent, yet very different records. Yoko Ono/Plastic Ono Band is hugely underrated, IMO. Post-punk before there was post-punk. It actually makes John Lennon/Plastic Ono Band look relatively conservative, and hits the spot in the same way for me as Public Image Ltd. or Can or The Fall do.

You’re being too simplistic and you’re insulting my poor heart (Turrican), Friday, 30 January 2015 20:16 (eleven years ago)

that and Fly are very krautrock-y. although I've never really understood why/how that came about, did Yoko visit Cologne with Klaus and Ringo at some point in 1970 or something

Οὖτις, Friday, 30 January 2015 20:30 (eleven years ago)

I'm fascinated by Lennon's guitar playing on this record, actually, particularly the searing guitar on 'Why?'... I love it when the screaming kicks in on 'AOS' too. Lennon's album is more lyrical and song-based, but I find Yoko's album far more expressive and cathartic.

You’re being too simplistic and you’re insulting my poor heart (Turrican), Friday, 30 January 2015 20:42 (eleven years ago)

Still have never listened to all of the John album. I love the Yoko album deeply. Even (most of) the bonus tracks on the reissue are great.

Indiana Jones and the Sphincter of the Sphinx (Old Lunch), Friday, 30 January 2015 20:42 (eleven years ago)

Beatles haircut came from German avant gardeners. Klaus did dada-pop collage for "Revolver". Beatles always had some proto-krautrock in them. Remember that long droney take of Revolution that leaked a few years ago?

Also there is that long-rumored 20+ minute version of "Helter Skelter" that I suspect has some cool stuff going on.....

©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 30 January 2015 20:45 (eleven years ago)

Also the lovely "Remember Love" (released while the Beatles were still together). Twee lofi indie pop w/o the insufferably, just pure uncut beauty.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a-wSiMplfJQ

©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 30 January 2015 20:48 (eleven years ago)

Beatles always had some proto-krautrock in them.

otm. "Tomorrow Never Knows" is seriously proto-krautrock.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 30 January 2015 20:48 (eleven years ago)

Isn't there supposed to be a 25 minute jam version of "It's All Too Much" that the released track was edited from?

Don A Henley And Get Over It (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 30 January 2015 20:57 (eleven years ago)

yeah yeah I'm aware of the Beatles' history with musique concrete and epic jams there's just something about those two Yoko records that slots in so perfectly with early krautrock - the locked-in groove, the abstraction, the tape effects - I just wonder if there was some more direct connection

Οὖτις, Friday, 30 January 2015 21:24 (eleven years ago)

They all went to art school and know about those techniques?

©Oz Quiz© (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 30 January 2015 21:26 (eleven years ago)

Yoko surely about those techniques, but Lennon didn't know that tapes could be played backwards, never mind what they sounded like backwards (to say nothing of loops), until 1966. His mantra was "'avant-garde' is French for bullshit" until he met Yoko.

Lennon's art school education was far different/more conservative than the later (and, significantly, London) art school experience of, say, Pete Townshend, who was immersed in an overtly avant-garde curriculum (and, as it turns out, witnessed a Yoko performance, in collaboration with Gustav Metzger, at least a year or two before Lennon met her).

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Friday, 30 January 2015 23:15 (eleven years ago)

you guys aren't really answering my question

Οὖτις, Friday, 30 January 2015 23:21 (eleven years ago)

although the implication seems to be that it was just osmosis - CAN and John/Yoko were on similar trajectories and arrived at the same point largely independent of each other

Οὖτις, Friday, 30 January 2015 23:22 (eleven years ago)

two years pass...

https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/51aLY99QTeL.jpg

i got the new vinyl Plastic Ono Band reissue. sounds great! i really love this record. it is still quite mindblowing. love the noise jams. love the drone rock. hey on some of these songs there are more Beatles playing than on actual Beatles songs. Ringo + John + i count bassist Klaus Voorman who may as well be an honorary Beatle from the OG days (and doing the cover art for Revolver). the Beatles with a German art school bass player and a Japanese conceptual artist lead singer. its the Beatles as Can.

"Why?" is such an powerhouse opener. i really love the direction it takes on side two. "Touch Me" and "Paper Shoes" going through different moods. the bit with the train going by. the part where the tree falls and it cuts right into a primal muck bass-drums groove by Ringo and Klaus. so great. i really appreciate the flow of this record, especially all the little found sounds. there is a part where the music stops and we just hear birds in a little forest for a while, a potent and soothing antidote. lot of love and care in this album.

the re-issue is really nice and comes with an art booklet and a foldout poster for the Feb 1968 Ornette Coleman performance that opens side 2. the label on the record is a grapefruit done in the style of the classic apple label. fucking awesome.

AdamVania (Adam Bruneau), Saturday, 15 July 2017 13:32 (eight years ago)

two years pass...

this is really cool:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=59qSQRoDj4w

Darin, Friday, 29 May 2020 20:23 (six years ago)

awww sweet. But now I'm going back through the thread and still wondering if Yoko and John had heard Can

curmudgeon, Saturday, 30 May 2020 04:18 (six years ago)

I just thank God they never heard Geir!

Mark G, Saturday, 30 May 2020 07:57 (six years ago)

two years pass...

Saw Revival69: The Concert That Rocked the World tonight, about the '69 concert in Toronto. Seems to be a Canadian film, but I'm sure it'll play everywhere.

Not really a concert film; all the performance clips are brief. (No footage of the Doors, just audio.) For the old guys--Berry, Little Richard, Lewis, Diddley, Gene Vincent--that's probably good. For me, the chance that any of them will improve on the brilliance of their best singles live is pretty much nil. ("Be-Bop-a-Lula," with Vincent backed by the Alice Cooper band, really misses.) They might sound like Sha Na Na--"Isn't this fun?"--or they might try to change the songs to keep up with the times, and both options are terrible. From what you do hear, Bo Diddley sounded the best to me.

So you're left with animated recreations of all the organizing, old video and audio clips (including many from Lennon), and all the talking heads reminiscing: John Brower (one of the two promoters), Shep Gordon and Anthony Fawcett (facilitators), Alice Cooper and Klaus Voorman and Robbie Krieger (performers), Christgau (on assignment), audience members Geddy Lee and Claudja Barry, Molly Davis (part of D.A. Pennebaker's crew, who filmed the concert), Edjo Leslie (the biker who fronted the money to entice the Doors!), others. Touching: Leslie was clearly smitten with Davis, and asks the filmmakers to send his regards. (Leslie and the other bikers do not come across as Altamont-like sinister, although who knows what nefarious things they were involved in.)

I found it really funny when, with the whole thing about to fall apart--the original bill didn't spark ticket sales, and neither did the addition of the Doors (maybe or maybe not because of recent trouble in Miami...)--someone suggests to Brower that he has to fly in Rodney Bingenheimer and Kim Fowley from L.A. to emcee the show. Which he does; struck me like like enlisting the captain of the Titanic to save your sinking ship. But it actually was Fowley who came up with the idea of contacting Lennon.

It's a great story, but I think I've maybe--finally--reached my limit with '60s and '70s pop stars looking back on these events. It's like they're always trying to sell you on the idea that this was the most amazing, most monumental thing that ever happened. And lots of amazing things do happen, but they have a certain style of talking about it all that's starting to wear on me.

Worth seeing in any event. I hadn't turned eight yet, but I wish my older cousin David had gotten tickets for me, him, and his brother Glen.

clemenza, Monday, 9 January 2023 02:42 (three years ago)

Interesting. Any performance clips of Lennon/Ono in the movie?

curmudgeon, Monday, 9 January 2023 03:10 (three years ago)

Just a tiny bit. And--many will hate this--Yoko's contributions are half-played for laughs. Although Voorman speaks thoughtfully about how he'd changed his mind about Yoko by the end.

clemenza, Monday, 9 January 2023 03:12 (three years ago)

From what you do hear, Bo Diddley sounded the best to me.

sounds about right!

budo jeru, Monday, 9 January 2023 07:14 (three years ago)

My Dad (a David, but no brother Glen) told me he had been at this. I’m on the fence as to whether he actually was but it’s still nice to think about.

she started dancing to that (Finefinemusic), Monday, 9 January 2023 13:12 (three years ago)

That's great. Do you know if he was also at the Toronto Pop Festival a few months earlier? (The Velvet Underground and Sly & the Family Stone!)

https://www.cbc.ca/archives/the-performers-at-canada-s-first-pop-festival-in-1969-1.5180010

Small chance your dad turns up in one of the crowd shots--you should see it.

clemenza, Monday, 9 January 2023 13:17 (three years ago)

The footage I've seen from that concert was pretty amazing. Little Richard especially (which was also used in The Little Richard Story a great film by William Klein. I think it was the first time I ever saw Jerry Lee Lewis play guitar - his set was good. I've only seen brief bits of the rest, but I'll have to check out Bo's.

birdistheword, Monday, 9 January 2023 14:02 (three years ago)

Which concert -- Toronto Pop or the other Toronto show?

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 9 January 2023 14:05 (three years ago)

Never mind. There's this:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JEtOMrXJFTw

Malevolent Arugula (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 9 January 2023 14:06 (three years ago)

Yeah, that's the one! I remember the outfit. FWIW, the one time I saw Little Richard in-person, he had the brightest, shiniest and most sparkling shoes I had EVER seen. Never mind shoes, of any piece of attire worn by anyone.

birdistheword, Monday, 9 January 2023 15:33 (three years ago)

I will watch them and look for him, he was only about 15 in ‘69 though so doubtful he was at anything earlier. Sadly I lost him a few years ago so can’t ask :(

she started dancing to that (Finefinemusic), Monday, 9 January 2023 16:47 (three years ago)

Oh I misread and thought the other was a couple years not months earlier

she started dancing to that (Finefinemusic), Monday, 9 January 2023 16:47 (three years ago)

Ritchie Yorke turns up in Marcus's column today, and also in Revival69--at one point, he was instrumental in saving the whole show. Made me laugh, because Yorke became a running punchline for a friend and I who both remembered his book Axes, Chops & Hot Licks, a look at Canadian pop in the early '70s. It was one of the few rock-related books that might be in your school library in the mid-'70s, at least if you were Canadian. (Yorke was Australian, but he moved to Canada and wrote for the Globe and the Telegram.) I don't know if either of us had even read him--I have a copy of Axes I bought later--but based on his 10-favourite list in the first Paul Gambaccini Top 200 book, we decided he was a good stand-in for a certain kind of '70s rock critic, best described, maybe, by the joke in Annie Hall about achieving "total heavy-osity." Very unfair, no doubt. He died five years ago.

clemenza, Monday, 16 January 2023 17:38 (three years ago)

He was included in the list of "10 Worst Rock Critics" that Marcus wrote for the Book of Rock Lists in 1980, I can't imagine that the passage of time has made him more beloved.

Halfway there but for you, Monday, 16 January 2023 17:56 (three years ago)

I'm sure that was part of us seizing on him in particular.

clemenza, Monday, 16 January 2023 18:13 (three years ago)


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